Posted on 08/01/2014 2:50:12 AM PDT by markomalley
One of the more difficult Biblical themes to understand is the concept of God hardening the hearts and minds of certain human beings. The most memorable case is that of Pharaoh wherein, before sending Moses to him God said he would harden Pharaohs heart (Ex 4:21). But there are other instances where biblical texts speak of God as hardening the hearts of sinners, even from among his own people.
Jesus hinted at such a theme too in the Sunday readings two weeks ago (Matt 13) when he said he spoke in parables (here understood more as riddles) in a way to affirm that the hearts of most people outside the house were hardened. He quotes Isaiah 6:9-10 as he does so. Jesus own apostles wondered why he spoke plainly only to them and a close company of disciples but in riddle-like parables to the crowds outside. In his answer we are left to wonder if Jesus has not perchance written off the crowds and left them in the hardness of their hearts. To be fair, his remark is ambiguous and open to interpretation.
What are we to make of texts like these which explicitly or implicitly speak of God hardening the hearts of people? How can God, who does no evil, be the source of a sinful mind or hard heart? Why would God do such a thing since he has said elsewhere:
To be sure, these questions involve very deep mysteries, mysteries about Gods sovereignty and how it interacts with our freedom, mysteries of time, and mysteries of causality. As a mystery within mysteries, the question of God hardening hearts cannot simply be resolved. Greater minds than I have pondered these things, and it would be foolish to think that a easy resolution is to be found in a blog post.
But some distinctions can and should be made, and some context supplied. We do not want to understand the hardening texts in simplistic ways, or in ways that use one truth to cancel out other important truths that balance it. So please permit only a modest summary of the ancient discussion.
I propose we examine these sorts of texts along four lines:
To begin it is important simply to list a selection of the hardening texts. The following are not the only ones, but they sample them widely enough:
Point I. - THE CONTEXT OF CONNIVANCE In properly assessing texts like these we ought first to consider the contexts in which they were made and written. Generally speaking, most all of these declarations that God hardens the heart, come after a significant period of disobedience on the part of those hardened. In a way, God cements the deal and gives them fully what they really want. For having hardened their own hearts to God, God determines that their disposition is a permanent one, and in a sovereign exercise of his will, (for nothing can happen without Gods allowance), declares and permits their heart to be hardened in a definitive kind of way. In this sense, there is a judgement of God upon the individual that recognizes their definitive decision against him. Hence, this hardening can be understood as voluntary, on the part of the one hardened, for God hardens in such a way that he uses their own will, whom he hardens, for the executing of his judgment and his acceptance that their will against him is definitive.
A. For example, in the case of Pharaoh, it is true, as the Exodus 4:21 text says above, God indicated to Moses that he would harden Pharaohs heart. But the actual working out of this is a bit more complicated than that. We see in the first five plagues, it is Pharaoh who hardens his own heart (Ex. 7:13; 7:22; 8:11; 8:28; & 9:7). It is only after this repeated hardening of his own heart, that the Exodus text shifts, and speaks of God as the one who hardens (Ex 9:12; 9:34; 10:1; 10:20; 10:27). Hence the hardening here is not without Pharaohs repeated demonstration of his own hardness, and God, if you will, cements the deal as a kind of sovereign judgment on Pharaoh.
B. The Isaiah texts, many in number, that speak of a hardening being visited upon Israel by God, (e.g. #s 3 and 4 above), are also the culmination of a long testimony, by the prophet, of Israels hardness. At the beginning of the Isaiahs ministry, Israels hardness was described as of their own doing by God who said through Isaiah: For the LORD has spoken: I reared children and brought them up, but they have rebelled against me. The ox knows his master, the donkey his owners manger, but Israel does not know, my people do not understand. Ah, sinful nation, a people loaded with guilt, a brood of evildoers, children given to corruption! They have forsaken the LORD; they have spurned the Holy One of Israel and turned their backs on him. (Is 1:2-4). There follows a long list of their crimes, their hardness and their refusal to repent.
1. St. John Chrysostom of the numerous texts Later in Isaiah (and also referenced by Jesus (e.g. Jn 12:40), that speak of Israel as being hardened by God, and having him shut their eyes, St John Chrysostom says, That the saying of Isaiah might be fulfilled: that here is expressive not of the cause, but of the event. They did not disbelieve because Isaias said they would; but because they would disbelieve, Isaias said they would . For He does not leave us, except we wish Him .Whereby it is plain that we begin to forsake first, and are the cause of our own perdition. For as it is not the fault of the sun, that it hurts weak eyes, so neither is God to blame for punishing those who do not attend to His words.(on a gloss of Is. 6:9-10 at Jn 12:40, quoted in the Catena Aurea).
2. St Augustine also says, This is not said to be the devils doing, but Gods. Yet if any ask why they could not believe, I answer, because they would not But the Prophet, you say, mentions another cause, not their will; but that God had blinded their eyes, and hardened their heart. But I answer, that they well deserved this. For God hardens and blinds a man, by forsaking and not supporting him; and this He makes by a secret sentence, for by an unjust one He cannot(Quoted in the Catena Aurea at Jn 12:40).
C. Of the text of 2 Thessalonians, God sends them a powerful delusion so that they will believe the lie quoted in # 5 above, while the text speaks of God as having sent the delusion, the verse before and after make clear the sinful role of the punished saying: They perish because they refused to love the truth and so be saved .so that all will be condemned who have not believed the truth but have delighted in wickedness ( 2 Thess 2:10,12).
1. Of this text, St. Augustine says, From a hidden judgment of God comes perversity of heart, so that the refusal to hear the truth leads to the commission of sin, and this sin is itself a punishment for the preceding sin [of refusing to hear the truth]. (Against Julian 5.3.12).
2. St John Damascus says, [God does this] so that all may be condemned who did not believe the truth but had pleasure in unrighteousness (The Orthodox Faith 4.26).
D. The texts from Romans 1 speak of God handing them over only after they have suppressed the truth (1:18), persevered in their wickedness (1:18) and preferred lust and idolatry (1:23-24), hence, as a just judgement, he hands them over to sexual confusion (homosexuality) and to countless other destructive drives. So here too, though it is said God hands them over, it is really not that simple. God has, in effect, cemented the deal. They do not want to serve them and so He, knowing their definitive decision, gives them what they want.
E. Thus, our first point of distinction in understanding the hardening texts is that the context of connivance is important in assessing them. It is not asserted by Scripture that God takes a reasonably righteous man and, out of the blue, hardens his heart, confuses his mind or causes him, against his will, to become obstinate. The texts are usually presented as a kind of prevenient judgement by God, that the state of the persons hardness has now become permanent. They refuse and so God cements the deal and causes them to walk in their own sinful ways since they have insisted so.
Point II. THE MYSTERY OF TIME In understanding these hardening texts, which we have seen, are akin to judgment texts, we must strive to recall that God does not live in time in the same we do. Scripture speaks often of Gods knowledge and vision of time as being comprehensive, rather than speculative or serial (e.g. Ex 3:14; Ps 90:2-4; Ps 93:2; Is 43:13; Ps 139; 2 Peter 3:8; James 1:17; inter al.).
A. To say that God is eternal and that he lives in eternity is to say that he lives in the fullness of time. For God, past, present and future are all the same. God is not wondering what I will do tomorrow, neither is he waiting for it to happen. For Him, my tomorrow has always been present to Him. All of my days were written in His book before one of them ever came to be (Ps 139:16). Whether, and how long I live, has always been known to him. Before he ever formed me in my mothers womb he knew me (Jer 1:4). My final destiny is already known and present to him.
B. Hence, when we strive to understand Gods judgments in the form of hardening the hearts of certain people, we must be careful not to think he lives in time like we do. It is not as though God is watching my life like a movie. He already knows the choice I will make. Thus, when God hardens the hearts of some, it is not as though he were merely trying to negatively influence the outcome, and trip certain people up. He already knows the outcome and has always known it, he knows the destiny they have chosen.
C. Now be very careful with this insight, for it is a mystery to us. We cannot really know what it is like to live in eternity, in the fullness of time, where the future is just is present as the past. If you think you know, you really dont. What is essential for us is that we realize that God does not live in time like we do. If we try too hard to solve the mystery (rather than merely accept and respect it) we risk falling into the denial of human freedom, or double predestination, or other wrong-headed notions that sacrifice one truth for another, rather than to hold them in balance. That God knows what I will do tomorrow, does not destroy my freedom to actually do it. How this all works out is mysterious. But we are free, Scripture teaches this, and God holds us accountable for our choices. Further, even though God knows my destiny already, and yours as well, does not mean that He is revealing anything about that to us, as though we should look for signs and seek to call ourselves saved or lost. We ought to work out our salvation in a reverential fear and trembling (Phil 2:12).
D. The Key point here is mystery. Striving to understand how, why and when God hardens the heart of anyone is caught up in the mysterious fact that he lives outside of time and knows all things before they happen. Thus he acts with comprehensive knowledge of all outcomes.
Point III. THE MYSTERY OF CAUSALITY - One of the major differences between the ancient and the modern world is that the ancient world was much more comfortable in dealing with something known as primary causality.
A. Up until the Renaissance God was at the center of all things and people instinctively saw the hand of God in everything, even terrible things. Job of old said, The LORD gave and the LORD has taken away; may the name of the LORD be praised .if we have received good things at the hand of God, why should we not receive evil? (Job 1:21; 2:10). Thus the ancients would commonly attribute everything as coming from the hand of God, for he was the first cause of everything that happened. This is what we mean by primary causality. The ancients were thus more comfortable attributing things to God that we are not. In speaking like this, they were not engaged in a form of superstitious or primitive thinking, but they emphasized that God was sovereign, omnipotent and omnipresent and that nothing happened apart from his sovereign will, He is the Primary Cause of all that is.
1. Of this ancient and scriptural way of thinking the Catechism says, And so we see the Holy Spirit, the principal author of Sacred Scripture, often attributing actions to God without mentioning any secondary causes [e.g. human or natural]. This is not a primitive mode of speech, but a profound way of recalling Gods primacy and absolute Lordship over history and the world, and so of educating his people to trust in him. (CCC # 304)
2. The Key point here is understanding that the ancient Biblical texts while often speaking of God as hardening the hearts of sinners, did not, as we saw above, mean that man had no role, or no responsibility. Neither did it mean that God acted in a merely arbitrary way. Rather, the emphasis was on Gods sovereign power as the first cause of all that is and hence he is often called the cause of all things and his hand is seen in everything. We moderns are uncomfortable in speaking this way as we shall see.
B. After the Renaissance man moved to the center and God was gradually escorted to the periphery. Thus our manner of thinking and speaking began to shift to secondary causes (causes related to man and nature). If something happens we look to natural causes, or in human situations, to the humans who caused it. These are secondary causes however, since I cannot cause something to happen unless God causes me. Yet increasingly the modern mind struggles to maintain a balance between the two mysteries of our freedom, and responsibility and Gods Sovereignty and omnipotence.
C. In effect we have largely thrown primary causality overboard as a category. Even modern believers unconsciously do this and thus exhibit three issues related to this.
1. We fail to maintain the proper balance between two mysteries: Gods Sovereignty and our freedom.
2. We exhibit shock at things like the hardening texts of the Bible because we understand them poorly.
3. We try to resolve the shock by favoring one truth over the other. Maybe we just brush aside the ancient biblical texts as a primitive mode of speech and say, inappropriately, God didnt have anything to do with this or that. Or we go to the other extreme and become fatalistic, deny human freedom, deny secondary causality (our part) and accuse God of everything; as if he were the only cause and had the sole blame for everything. Thus, we either read the hardening texts with a clumsy literalism, or dismiss them as misguided notions from an immature, primitive, and pre-scientific age.
D. The point here is that we have to balance the mysteries of primary and secondary causality. We cannot fully understand how they interrelate, but they do. Both mysteries need to be held. The ancients were more sophisticated in holding these mysteries in the proper balance. We are not. We handle causality very clumsily and do not appreciate the distinctions of primary causality (Gods part) and secondary causality (our part, and natures too). We try to resolve the mystery rather than hold it in balance and speak to both realities. As such, we are poor interpreters of the hardening texts.
Point IV THE NECESSITY OF HUMILITY - By now it will be seen that we are dealing with a mysterious interrelationship of God and Man, between our freedom and Gods sovereignty, between primary and secondary causality. In the face of such mysteries we have to be very humble. We ought not think more of the details than is proper for us, for, frankly they are largely hidden from us. Too many moderns either dismiss the hardening texts or accept them and sit in harsh judgment over God, as if we could do such a thing. Neither approach bespeaks humility. Consider a shocking but very humbling text where Paul warns us in this very matter:
What then shall we say? Is God unjust? Not at all! For he says to Moses, I will have mercy on whom I have mercy, and I will have compassion on whom I have compassion. It does not, therefore, depend on mans desire or effort, but on Gods mercy. For the Scripture says to Pharaoh: I raised you up for this very purpose, that I might display my power in you and that my name might be proclaimed in all the earth. Therefore God has mercy on whom he wants to have mercy, and he hardens whom he wants to harden. One of you will say to me: Then why does God still blame us? For who resists his will? But who are you, O man, to talk back to God? Shall what is formed say to him who formed it, Why did you make me like this? (Romans 9:14-20)
In effect, none of can demand an absolute account of God for what he does. Even if he were to tell us, could our small and worldly minds ever really comprehend it? My thoughts are not your thoughts, and my ways are not your ways, says the Lord (Is 55:8).
Summary In this post, rather too long, we have considered the hardening texts where it seems that God is said to harden the hearts of certain people and groups. And so he does. But texts like these must be carefully approached with proper distinctions, appeal to the scriptural and historical context, and deep humility. There are profound mysteries at work here: mysteries of Gods sovereignty, our freedom, his mercy and also his justice.
We ought to careful to admit the limits of our knowledge when it comes to such texts. As the Catechism so beautifully stated, when it comes to texts like these, they are to appreciated as a profound way of recalling Gods primacy and absolute Lordship over history and the world, and so of educating his people to trust in him. (CCC # 304)
This song says, Be not angry any longer Lord and no more remember our iniquities. Behold and regard us, we are all your people!
(video at link)
Msgr Pope ping.
One point he doesn’t bring up about the Exodus is that God said, “... and I will execute judgment on all the gods of Egypt.” Well, Pharoah WAS one of the gods of Egypt!
Pharoah hurt his own people, plus Pharoah ordered a greater death toll on the Hebrews than God allowed to be inflicted by the plagues.
http://christianthinktank.com/killheir.html
Then, Pharoah hardened his own heart, not God. Pharaoh wasn’t willing to humble himself, even when his own priests and court magicians came to confessing that the Hebrew God was God.
The little I HAVE read, compared to the two replies (so far) warrant a more careful study of the points Pope is (trying to) make
And Exodus 14:4, "And I will harden Pharaoh's heart, that he shall follow after them; and I will be honoured upon Pharaoh, and upon all his host; that the Egyptians may know that I am the Lord."
Even more than other parts of the Old Testament, the events of the Exodus have to be considered in the light of Jesus’s passion, death, and resurrection. This is the central event of, well, of everything, and all other events have meaning in relation to it.
Msgr. Pope could write an interesting piece about the phrase “... know that I am the LORD.” It’s found in many contexts, including in Ezekiel’s “dry bones” passage.
I’ve always assumed it was a manner of speaking that meant God allowed it to happen, I.e didn’t intervene to prevent, not that he actively did this.
Ping!
No question that He did harden some human hearts - the real question is whether He continues to do so under the New Covenant...
Read Romans 1:18 - 32. Seems it gives some clarity to the issue.
Continuing in sin once warned by God (as Moses warned Pharoah) results in a hardening of one’s heart - a willful blindness perhaps. God made man this way - the more he resists any revelation from God - the blinder he becomes, and the harder his heart becomes.
The converse is also true. The more one receives revelation from God, and acts upon it, the more light is given to one.
Did God have an active part in this? Scripture clearly says so. BUT, it does not exclude man’s part. And his reaction to God’s truth (light, revelation) will always bear the fruit of man’s reaction.
What is God’s part and what is man’s part is a mystery that we probably will never comprehend until we see His face and are with Him.
Our insisting on comprehending something beyond us results in our taking one of two sides: The hyper-Calvinist ultra-predestination view, or its opposite - that man decides everything. Both are error. If they exclude the other.
Scripture clearly presents both as being concurrently true, and our finite minds cannot comprehend this.
"To him who has will more be given, but from him who has not, even what little he has will be taken away."
It seems that atheists have their hearts hardened by the thought of God and gets harder as time goes on. I think it is a process that God affects everyone. Hearts are changed by all. The hearts of those who fear him turn toward him and those who hate him turn away. The more we are exposed the more we either harden or soften. Its a our reaction to God that causes change.
That's true of many different concepts. For example:
Is God just, or merciful? Both, 100%.
Is Jesus God, or man? Both, 100%.
Thank you for posting those. Msgr. Pope is a great homilist.
Absolutely right-on.
While God is incomprehensible, He has indeed revealed Himself in scripture - but primarily in His Son - who is the full revelation of who He is.......
Because He is God, there is much more to Him than we can comprehend, and indeed, scripture says it will take all of eternity for Him to reveal Himself to us.....
But the revelation that we now have in scripture and the Lord Jesus are all we need.......for this life.......and there are volumes more that He wants to reveal to us here and now, just as Paul wrote in Philippians 3:9 ff........
As someone said, we can have as much of God as we want........
A couple more passages on the subject:
(BBE)
Rom 9:18 So then, at his pleasure he has mercy on a man, and at his pleasure he makes the heart hard.
(BBE)
Rom 11:5 In the same way, there are at this present time some who are marked out by the selection of grace.
Rom 11:6 But if it is of grace, then it is no longer of works: or grace would not be grace.
Rom 11:7 What then? That which Israel was searching for he did not get, but those of the selection got it and the rest were made hard.
Rom 11:8 As it was said in the holy Writings, God gave them a spirit of sleep, eyes which might not see, and ears which have no hearing, to this day.
Exactly. We have free will. He knows what is to come as the result of our rebellion, but we own the responsibility.
Good article.
If one remembers that God is love and everything that He does is for love, then we understand that every heart He hardens, every act of wrath that is outpoured, is in response to our rebellion and God breaking through our rebellious spirit.
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